Volume 32, Issue. 4, August, 2016


Sleep and Cognitive Abnormalities in Acute Minor Thalamic Infarction

 Wei Wu1 • Linyang Cui1 • Ying Fu1 • Qianqian Tian1 • Lei Liu1 • Xuan Zhang1 • Ning Du1 • Ying Chen1 • Zhijun Qiu1 • Yijun Song1 • Fu-Dong Shi1,2 • Rong Xue1 


1Department of Neurology, Tianjin Medical University General Hospital, Tianjin 300052, China
2Department of Neurology, Barrow Neurological Institute, St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center, Phoenix, AZ 85013, USA

Abstract 

In order to characterize sleep and the cognitive patterns in patients with acute minor thalamic infarction (AMTI), we enrolled 27 patients with AMTI and 12 matched healthy individuals. Questionnaires about sleep and cognition as well as polysomnography (PSG) were performed on days 14 and 90 post-stroke. Compared to healthy controls, in patients with AMTI, hyposomnia was more prevalent; sleep architecture was disrupted as indicated by decreased sleep efficiency, increased sleep latency, and decreased non-rapid eye movement sleep stages 2 and 3; more sleep-related breathing disorders occurred; and cognitive functions were worse, especially memory. While sleep apnea and long-delay memory recovered to a large extent in the patients, other sleep and cognitive function deficit often persisted. Patients with AMTI are at an increased risk for hyposomnia, sleep structure disturbance, sleep apnea, and memory deficits. Although these abnormalities improved over time, the slow and incomplete improvement suggest that early management should be considered in these patients.

Keywords

Acute minor thalamic infarction; Polysomnography; Cognition

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